TY - JOUR
T1 - Belief as defeasible knowledge
AU - Moses, Yoram
AU - Shoham, Yoav
N1 - Funding Information:
*This work was supported in part by the US-Israel Binational Foundation. The work of the first author was supported by an Alon Fellowship. The second author is supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. A preliminary article bearing the same title appeared in the proceedings of LICAI-89.
PY - 1993/12
Y1 - 1993/12
N2 - We investigate the relation between the notions of knowledge and belief. Contrary to the well-known slogan about knowledge being "justified, true belief", we propose that belief be viewed as defeasible knowledge. We offer several related definitions of belief as knowledge-relative-to-assumptions, and provide complete axiomatic systems for the resulting notions of belief. We also show a close tie between our definitions and the literature on nonmonotonic reasoning. Our definitions of belief have several advantages. First, they are short. Second, we do not need to add anything to the logic of knowledge: the "right" properties of belief fall out of our definitions and the properties of knowledge. Third, the connection between knowledge and belief is derived from one fundamental principle. Finally, a major attraction of logics of knowledge in computer science has been the concrete grounding of the mental notion in objective phenomena; by reducing belief to knowledge we obtain this grounding for a notion of belief.
AB - We investigate the relation between the notions of knowledge and belief. Contrary to the well-known slogan about knowledge being "justified, true belief", we propose that belief be viewed as defeasible knowledge. We offer several related definitions of belief as knowledge-relative-to-assumptions, and provide complete axiomatic systems for the resulting notions of belief. We also show a close tie between our definitions and the literature on nonmonotonic reasoning. Our definitions of belief have several advantages. First, they are short. Second, we do not need to add anything to the logic of knowledge: the "right" properties of belief fall out of our definitions and the properties of knowledge. Third, the connection between knowledge and belief is derived from one fundamental principle. Finally, a major attraction of logics of knowledge in computer science has been the concrete grounding of the mental notion in objective phenomena; by reducing belief to knowledge we obtain this grounding for a notion of belief.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0027885317&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/0004-3702(93)90107-M
DO - 10.1016/0004-3702(93)90107-M
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AN - SCOPUS:0027885317
SN - 0004-3702
VL - 64
SP - 299
EP - 321
JO - Artificial Intelligence
JF - Artificial Intelligence
IS - 2
ER -